Desperately seeking Hanna

We found these Country Fair magazines a few years ago in a shop in Lewes and have had the covers framed on our wall for a while. They’re signed with a single name – “Hanna”.

We really like the pictures, in a sentimental, anthropomorphic kind of way.

One day we thought we’d Google “Hanna”, hoping to buy some larger prints. We expected thousands of results to come up, but could hardly find any. So we forgot all about it for a while.

Then, a few weeks ago, we came across this book from Prion Books – a compendium of articles from the magazine. We bought it, hoping to find out more about the illustrator, but there was no mention. We even emailed the publisher about it and got no reply (boo).

However, this sparked off another bout of Google detective work, and we’ve finally established that he’s called John Hanna. He was obviously quite respected in his day – there’s a photo of him in a National Portrait Gallery collection (which also gives the helpful clue that he was Australian).

Thing is, we still can’t find out much more about him. Let alone where to get hold of his work.

Can anyone shed any light? We feel like we must be missing something obvious.

Comments

Thanks Adam – we did come across that link, but weren’t convinced because there was no mention at all of Country Fair or animal illustrations, which seemed weird. This John Hanna seems to be a humorous, black & white newspaper cartoonist, although I guess he could have done something like this on the side. The dates he was in London seem to match up (Country Life illustrations are all during the late fifties). It says he usually operated under the name “Wiz”, but a search for “Wiz” and “John Hanna” unfortunately doesn’t seem to turn up anything of use.

This is that really odd thing where you think someone's broken into your house and rifled the bookshelves. I bought a run of these superb magazines a few years ago at a Northamptonshire book fair. I hadn't heard of them before, I've heard nothing since. Until now. I too will join the research teams out there tracking down Mr.Hanna. But wasn't he in Four Weddings And A Funeral?

I've got a stack of these magazines, they are gorgeous covers, though I draw the line at cutting them up to frame; they are really interesting to read as well, which is why I've got an article and photo of John Hanna, from the August 1955 edition. If you'd like me to scan it and email it to you, let me know.

Delighted to find this website as I am the son of John Hanna. My father started as a cartoonist, mainly with the Argus in Melbourne, until he emigrated to England in 1947. He got a job in the art department of S. H. Benson, the first advertising agency to be registered as a limited liability company, famous for it's Guinness advertising and for employing Dorothy Sayers in the "literary" department. About 1950 he went freelance and mainly designed posters and other ad material for a variety of brands such as Walls ice cream, Sugar Puffs and Peak Frean biscuits. His Walls ice cream "deckchair" poster is visible on Walls ice cream UK 1950 Prints All Posters.co.UK. He was a member of the Society of Industrial Artists, now renamed the Society of Chartered Designers, and some of his work is featured in their 1951 publication Designers in Britain 3. Worried about the increasing use of photography on advertising he accepted the offer of a job as art director of an ad agency in Sydney in 1961. After a
few years he went freelance again which enabled to extend his work to book illustrations etc. One of these books was about folk dancing written by his daughter Nicky Lo Bianco. He lived in Avalon Beach, near Sydney, until he died in 1992. He also painted some landscapes, one of which hangs on my bedroom wall in Oundle. My sister, who lives in Melbourne, as I returned to England in 1967.